New RCEs, Darknet Busts, Kernel Bugs & 25+ More Stories

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Ravie LakshmananJan 29, 2026Cybersecurity / Hacking News

This week’s updates show how small changes can create real problems. Not loud incidents, but quiet shifts that are easy to miss until they add up. The kind that affects systems people rely on every day.

Many of the stories point to the same trend: familiar tools being used in unexpected ways. Security controls are being worked on. Trusted platforms turning into weak spots. What looks routine on the surface often isn’t.

There’s no single theme driving everything — just steady pressure across many fronts. Access, data, money, and trust are all being tested at once, often without clear warning signs.

This edition pulls together those signals in short form, so you can see what’s changing before it becomes harder to ignore.

Seen together, these stories show problems building slowly, not all at once. The same gaps are being used again and again until they work.

Most of this didn’t start this week. It’s growing, spreading, and getting easier for attackers to repeat. The full list helps show where things are heading before they become normal.



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The weapons the US has in place as it threatens to attack Iran

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As negotiations are scheduled, Alex Gatopoulos breaks down how the US is applying pressure from the air, sea and sky

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WA work safety watchdog makes ‘initial enquiries’ after family who hired kayak and paddleboards washed out to sea | Western Australia

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WorkSafe WA is making ‘initial enquiries’ into the hotel that hired out a kayak and inflatable paddleboards to a family who was washed out to sea and later rescued.

The Appelbee family was on holiday in Quindalup, 200km (125 miles) south of Perth, when strong winds pushed their vessels offshore from Geographe Bay on Friday afternoon.

Joanne Appelbee, the children’s mother, made “one of the hardest decisions” to send her 13-year-old son, Austin, to swim four hours through tumultuous waters to raise the alarm.

After the boy made it safely to shore and alerted emergency services, his mother, brother Beau, 12, and sister Grace, eight, were found at about 8.30pm, drifting in the ocean and clinging to a paddleboard about 14km (9 miles) offshore.

map showing location of Quindalup

On Thursday a WorkSafe WA spokesperson said the group was aware of the incident although they had not been “formally notified” and were “currently making initial enquiries”.

A spokesperson for the Australian Maritime Safety Authority (Amsa) said in a statement on Thursday that it had been alerted to the incident and was making inquiries.

Club Wyndham Resort, where the family was staying, denied any wrongdoing in a statement to media on Wednesday evening.

“As our guests are free to use resort equipment on a complimentary basis until late in the day, our staff had no reason to be alarmed,” a spokesperson said.

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“Guests are aware that the beach is outside the resort grounds, is unpatrolled, and that there is no direct view of the beach from the resort.”

“However, as a matter of course, the resort is conducting a safety review to minimise the risk of any similar incident occurring in the future.”

The resort has not responded to Guardian Australia’s request for further comment.

Prof Rob Brander at the UNSW beach safety research group said people often assume it’s safe to go into the ocean when it is calm and there are no breaking waves.

He said that is a problematic assumption, considering one of the main reasons why water close to the coastline is calm is from strong offshore winds.

“It’s literally blowing the ocean surface flat and creating small waves that are moving offshore,” he said. “This can create a surface drift that can take you a long way offshore.”

Surf Life Saving (SLS) WA general manager Chris Peck agreed and said “you don’t need waves, swell and rips for it to be a hazardous situation”.

He said he felt “positive” to be having a conversation about a family “still alive and together” – but emphasised the importance of beach safety.

He encouraged beachgoers to consider finding out where their nearest patrolled beach is and to stay between the red and yellow flags, but acknowledged it can be difficult.

“If you’re in doubt, don’t go out,” he stressed.

Brander also said beachgoers should be wary that inflatable watercraft are dangerous for use in the ocean.

“It’s like putting up a sail,” he said. “The problem is inflatables stick above the surface of the water, and the wind just grabs that, especially if you’re standing or kneeling, you’re the sail.”

He suggested taking a few minutes “just thinking about beach safety” before you enter the water, considering what you would do if something went wrong and who you would contact.

Peck agreed and said when people buy inflatables they should consider the difference between using them in a pool versus the ocean.

“The ocean is the most dynamic environment you can enter, because it changes every second,” he said. “Just because it’s flat and it looks clear in the water and the sun’s out, doesn’t mean that the wind’s not blowing offshore and you won’t get pushed out.”



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Estonia tests Euro alternatives amid Microsoft rollout • The Register

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An Estonian government IT agency is trialling European alternatives to US software providers, even as it moves many of the country’s civil servants to a centrally-managed cloud computing service provided by Microsoft.

Ergo Tars, the director of Riigi IT (RIT), told the country’s national broadcaster ERR that it has no plans to ditch Microsoft or other US-based suppliers but wants to be prepared in case it is forced to do so.

Plane. Image via shutterstock

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Tars said it was possible the European Union could decide that US technology products were no longer trustworthy.

“In that case there would not be much difference whether it is Microsoft, Amazon, or Google. Then we would have to look purely at Europe-based products,” he said.

Tars said he had discussed dependence on US IT infrastructure with his counterparts in other European countries over the last year, and was developing a European alternative that could be ready for testing in the second half of 2025. As well as regulatory action, reasons include cost and risks based on data being held outside the country.

According to RIT, around €400 of the €2,000 cost of each government agency workstation goes to Microsoft in licence fees. Tars said an open source alternative to Microsoft Office and Windows, such as LibreOffice or OpenOffice running on Linux, would be unlikely to save much money given the need for support, user management, and staff education.

RIT has so far moved about 8,500 of 25,000 government workstations to its cloud computing service and plans to increase this to 15,000 over the next two years. The higher-security defense, interior (home), and foreign ministries will continue to use alternatives.

Estonia takes its digital resilience seriously, although this has previously been due to fears of Russia rather than worries about America.

In 2007 the country was hit by waves of cyberattacks which took down government websites, media services, and cashpoints after it moved a Soviet-era statue out of central Tallinn. The steps it has taken since to toughen security include establishing a ‘data embassy’ – a secure data centre – in Luxembourg as a back-up for key digital services and datasets.

Countries across Europe look likely to spend more on technology to develop digital sovereignty and reduce dependence on US providers, according to analyst firm Forrester.

In December, European aerospace giant Airbus told The Register that it wants to use a cloud provider based in its home continent to support a move away from on-premises applications. ®



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Here’s why Israel is allowing record murder rates in its Palestinian towns | Israel-Palestine conflict

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While the international media has rightly focused on the genocide and enormous displacement in Gaza alongside the ethnic cleansing in the West Bank and occupied East Jerusalem, the 300 murders inside Israel in 2025, 252 of whom were Palestinian victims, garnered little to no media coverage outside Israel. Yet last year marked the deadliest year on record for murders among Palestinian citizens of Israel, who make up 21 percent of Israel’s population but sustain 80 percent of the murders. That is one murder every 36 hours.

The international media have also covered the rise in anti-Semitism across the world, even as there has been little to no media coverage of how Israel has been exaggerating and instrumentalising a Zionist notion of anti-Semitism to create moral panic among Jews everywhere. Indeed, when I speak to Jewish friends in Israel, they often ask how I, who live in London, cope with anti-Semitism. As consumers of Israeli news, they can be forgiven for thinking that Jews across the world are in imminent danger.

These two phenomena – the crime epidemic within Palestinian communities inside Israel and the weaponisation of anti-Semitism to amplify Jewish fear – might seem totally unconnected. Yet there is a clear thread linking them, and it is called demographic engineering.

The foundational acts

Demographic engineering has been at the heart of the Zionist project. During the 1948 war, about 750,000 Palestinians were displaced in what Fayez Sayegh called “racial elimination”. As part of this process, Palestinian cities were depopulated, and about 500 Palestinian villages were destroyed. By 1951, the Palestinians who had become refugees had been “replaced” by a similar number of Jewish immigrants, both Holocaust survivors from Europe and Mizrahi Jews from Arab countries, thus transforming the state’s racial composition without altering its overall population size.

In the wake of the war, Israel not only disregarded United Nations Resolution 194 affirming the right of Palestinians who had been made refugees in 1948 to return to their homes, but in 1950 it passed the Law of Return, bestowing “on Jews worldwide the right to enter Israel and obtain Israeli citizenship regardless of their countries of origin and whether or not they can show links to Israel-Palestine, while withholding any comparable right from Palestinians, including those with documented ancestral homes in the country”.

Over the past two years, a number of Israeli politicians and influencers have characterised what Israel has been doing in the territories it occupied in 1967 as completing the job left undone in 1948: “A second, real Nakba, to finish [former Israeli Prime Minister David] Ben-Gurion’s work,” one journalist quipped. Simultaneously, within Israel, a different kind of demographic strategy is unfolding, even as the overall objective remains the same.

Crime as an impetus to leave

Itamar Ben-Gvir is surely not the first minister of national security to have allowed criminal gangs to terrorise Palestinian communities. But on Ben Gvir’s watch, the murders have reached record levels. And 2026 seems to be following the trend, with 31 more Palestinians murdered during the first month.

On the one hand, Israel has used the soaring crime to portray Palestinian citizens as uncivilised and barbaric, extending the dehumanisation from stateless Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank to its own citizens. On the other hand, it has enabled criminals to terrorise Palestinian towns.

Indeed, the police have solved only 15 percent of the murders within the Palestinian community while doing little, if anything, to stop criminals from collecting “protection fees” from businesses – fees that extract an estimated two billion shekels ($650m) a year from the community.

On January 22, Palestinians launched the largest demonstration since 2019, waving black flags while chanting slogans accusing the police of total abandonment. The following day, the organisers called a general strike, with one of the organisers, Mohammed Shlaata, making it clear that responsibility for the violence lies with the authorities: “We are in a state of emergency,” he said. “We have a clear finger of accusation – we blame the police.”

Talking to Palestinian friends, some tell me they fear for their children’s lives and want them to leave the country, while others have packed their bags and left. Admittedly, the number of those leaving is low, but Palestinian citizens are reaching a boiling point.

Anti-Semitism and negative migration

At the same time that the government does nothing to quell criminal activity and lawlessness within Palestinian communities in Israel, it exaggerates and instrumentalises a Zionist notion of anti-Semitism to continuously reassert Jewish victimhood.

While much has been written on the use of a false notion of anti-Semitism – that conflates criticism of Israel and Zionism with anathema towards Jews – to silence Palestinian and pro-Palestinian voices, much less has been said about the mobilisation of anti-Semitism to address Israel’s problem of negative migration.

Since 2023, more Jews have been leaving the country than entering. In 2024, the number of citizens leaving Israel was 26,000 higher than the number of immigrants entering it; in 2025, the gap was about 37,000 Israelis. In other words, negative migration has jumped by more than 42 percent, and Israeli officials are worried that this trend is taking root and even accelerating.

Accordingly, both the Israeli public and the Jewish diaspora are told again and again that anti-Semitism across the globe has gone rampant. Jews are told that the horrific Bondi massacre in Australia is an indication of a new global trend, that in the United Kingdom anti-Semitism has been normalised, and that in Europe Jews are afraid to wear kippahs.

Anti-Semitism has undoubtedly soared over the past two years, and there is obviously a kernel of truth in these articles. But in contrast to the very real panic among Palestinian citizens, which the state has ignored, in the case of anti-Semitism, the state dramatically exaggerates and instrumentalises the evidence to produce a moral panic. The message is clear: Jews across the world should fear for their lives, and therefore those who live in Israel should be wary of leaving, while the only way diasporic Jews can be safe is by migrating to Israel.

Supremacy as glue

The glue holding all of the demographic strategies Israel deploys together is the belief in Jewish exceptionalism and supremacy. The genocide in Gaza and ethnic cleansing in the West Bank are justified through the dehumanisation of Palestinians; the neglect of the murders and crime in Palestinian communities within Israel is informed by racial discrimination that has been ongoing since 1948; and Israel is weaponising racism against Jews to curb negative migration. The ultimate objective is to guarantee the racial-religious character of Israel as exclusively Jewish, while the dream is a pure Jewish state.

The views expressed in this article are the author’s own and do not necessarily reflect Al Jazeera’s editorial policy.



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Epstein’s help sought in bid to meet Chuck Schumer, files reveal | Business and Economy News

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Email exchange shows Epstein sought to arrange meeting between top Democrat and US Virgin Islands representative.

An associate of the United States Virgin Islands’ sole representative in the US Congress asked Jeffrey Epstein for help to arrange a meeting between the politician and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, according to documents released by the US Justice Department.

The outreach to Epstein was made on behalf of Stacey Plaskett, the islands’ delegate to the House of Representatives, as the politician sought to lobby Schumer for relief after two hurricanes ripped through the Caribbean in 2017, according to the documents.

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“We have to help Stacey get a meeting with Schumer. Any thoughts?” Erika Kellerhals, a tax lawyer in the US Virgin Islands, wrote to Epstein in an email on January 24, 2018.

“[S]hould not be a problem need to know the reason and subject,” Epstein wrote back a few hours later.

“She has been unable to confirm a meeting with him. He is driving the disaster relief bill and has only been talking about Puerto Rico and not the [Virgin Islands]. She’s concerned we will be ignored,” Kellerhals told Epstein in response.

After his exchange with Kellerhals, Epstein sent an email to Kathy Ruemmler, a former chief counsel to US President Barack Obama, asking for help in setting up a meeting with Schumer.

“schumer is driving the puerto rico . virgin islands relief=bill. the VI congressional rep Stacey plaskett , h=s not been able to get a meeting. confirmed with him. ca= you help?” Epstein wrote to Ruemmler, who is now the chief lawyer to Goldman Sachs.

“I do not have any relations=ip with him, but let me see whether I can get to his COS,” Ruemmler said in response, referring to his chief of staff.

The emails are among some 3.5 million pages of files released last week that relate to US authorities’ investigations into Epstein, who died by suicide in 2019 while awaiting trial on sex trafficking charges.

It is not clear if a meeting between Schumer and Plaskett went ahead, though Congress ultimately approved emergency funds for the US Virgin Islands as part of a two-year budget package passed in February 2018.

There is no public record of Schumer meeting or directly communicating with Epstein.

Schumer, Plaskett and Kellerhals did not respond to requests for comment. Ruemmler could not be reached for comment.

The email exchange with Epstein, which has not been previously reported, is the latest among numerous examples of how the disgraced financier continued to exert influence at the highest levels of politics and business long after his 2008 conviction for soliciting prostitution with a minor.

Plaskett’s ties to Epstein have been a source of controversy for years.

Plaskett narrowly escaped censure by the House of Representatives last year over revelations that Epstein had coached her over text during a Congressional hearing in February 2019.

Shortly after Epstein was arrested for a second time in July 2019, Plaskett announced that she would donate a sum to charity equivalent to several campaign donations she had received from Epstein and his associates.

While Plaskett is a non-voting member of Congress, the Democrat participates in floor debates and sits on several influential committees, including the House Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence.

Plaskett has previously denied enabling Epstein, calling him a “demon” and saying she was “disgusted by his deviant behavior”.



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ind vs pak cpntroversey: Pakistan is trying to find a solution to ICC’s ‘force majeure clause’

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New Delhi. Pakistan’s situation regarding the boycott of the match against India in the T20 World Cup 2026 is becoming more complicated day by day. Despite Pakistan Prime Minister’s announcement on the open platform of not playing the match against India in Colombo on February 15, the Pakistan Cricket Board (PCB) has not yet given formal information about this decision to the International Cricket Council (ICC). Now according to sources, if ICC moves towards action or sanctions under the force majeure clause, then PCB has started all preparations to give its clarification.

Patience from the Indian Board on this entire matter is very limited. Officials of the Board of Control for Cricket in India have termed the claim of force majeure as weak and selective. A BCCI official said, “If Pakistan had no problem in playing against India in the Under-19 World Cup on the same day the Pakistan government posted the boycott of the T20 World Cup match, then this argument cannot be accepted. The biggest problem for Pakistan is the lack of continuity. If it is really impossible to play due to government instructions, then why boycott only one match? Why not withdraw from the entire tournament? Why was the decision taken to go to Colombo?”

What move is Pakistan going to make?

In simple words, Pakistan’s argument would be that this boycott was not their own decision. PCB officials are set to tell the ICC that they were acting under government instructions and the situation was “out of their control”. As proof of this, they want to attach the social media post made by the Pakistan government on February 1, in which it was publicly stated that the team will not take the field against India.

According to reports, this may be the last option left with Pakistan. An official close to the situation was quoted as saying, “This is their last resort, as they have no other reason for not playing the match against India. Especially when this match is to be played in Sri Lanka, a neutral venue, where Pakistan has agreed to play all their remaining matches, in such a situation there is neither any cricketing, nor logistics, nor security related reason for skipping the match.

What is ‘Force Majeure Clause’?

‘Force majeure clause’ is a French phrase, which means extraordinary event. It is a provision (clause) in legal contracts that legally relieves a party if it is unable to perform its contractual obligations due to unexpected, out-of-control events (such as war, riot, natural disaster, or epidemic). With the help of this, ICC is planning to drag PCB to court.

History of boycott is also against Pakistan

In previous World Cups too, teams have occasionally boycotted matches, but then there were security threats or concrete reasons. England refused to tour Zimbabwe in 2003 due to threats, while Australia and West Indies did not tour Sri Lanka during the civil war but Pakistan has no such excuse which is why the ICC can take action against them, something which has never happened before. If the India-Pakistan match does not take place, ICC will have to suffer a huge loss of approximately Rs 2230 crore.

Apart from this, the claim of distance between politics and cricket also appears weak. The Prime Minister of Pakistan is the Patron-in-Chief of the PCB, while the Chairman of the Board is currently a Union Minister. In such a situation, the argument of distance between the state and the cricket board would hardly satisfy the ICC.

Researchers Find 175,000 Publicly Exposed Ollama AI Servers Across 130 Countries

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A new joint investigation by SentinelOne SentinelLABS, and Censys has revealed that the open-source artificial intelligence (AI) deployment has created a vast “unmanaged, publicly accessible layer of AI compute infrastructure” that spans 175,000 unique Ollama hosts across 130 countries.

These systems, which span both cloud and residential networks across the world, operate outside the guardrails and monitoring systems that platform providers implement by default, the company said. The vast majority of the exposures are located in China, accounting for a little over 30%. The countries with the most infrastructure footprint include the U.S., Germany, France, South Korea, India, Russia, Singapore, Brazil, and the U.K.

“Nearly half of observed hosts are configured with tool-calling capabilities that enable them to execute code, access APIs, and interact with external systems, demonstrating the increasing implementation of LLMs into larger system processes,” researchers Gabriel Bernadett-Shapiro and Silas Cutler added.

Ollama is an open-source framework that allows users to easily download, run, and manage large language models (LLMs) locally on Windows, macOS, and Linux. While the service binds to the localhost address at 127.0.0[.]1:11434 by default, it’s possible to expose it to the public internet by means of a trivial change: configuring it to bind to 0.0.0[.]0 or a public interface.

The fact that Ollama, like the recently popular Moltbot (formerly Clawdbot), can be hosted locally and operate outside of the enterprise security perimeter, poses new security concerns. This, in turn, necessitates new approaches to distinguish between managed and unmanaged AI compute, the researchers said.

Of the observed hosts, more than 48% advertise tool-calling capabilities via their API endpoints that, when queried, return metadata highlighting the functionalities they support. Tool calling (or function calling) is a capability that allows LLMs to interact with external systems, APIs, and databases, enabling them to augment their capabilities or retrieve real-time data.

“Tool-calling capabilities fundamentally alter the threat model. A text-generation endpoint can produce harmful content, but a tool-enabled endpoint can execute privileged operations,” the researchers noted. “When combined with insufficient authentication and network exposure, this creates what we assess to be the highest-severity risk in the ecosystem.”

The analysis has also identified hosts supporting various modalities that go beyond text, including reasoning and vision capabilities, with 201 hosts running uncensored prompt templates that remove safety guardrails.

The exposed nature of these systems means they could be susceptible to LLMjacking, where a victim’s LLM infrastructure resources are abused by bad actors to their advantage, while the victim foots the bill. These could range from generating spam emails and disinformation campaigns to cryptocurrency mining and even reselling access to other criminal groups.

The risk is not theoretical. According to a report published by Pillar Security this week, threat actors are actively targeting exposed LLM service endpoints to monetize access to the AI infrastructure as part of an LLMjacking campaign dubbed Operation Bizarre Bazaar.

The findings point to a criminal service that contains three components: systematically scanning the internet for exposed Ollama instances, vLLM servers, and OpenAI-compatible APIs running without authentication; validating the endpoints by assessing response quality; and commercializing the access at discounted rates by advertising it on silver[.]inc, which operates as a Unified LLM API Gateway.

“This end-to-end operation – from reconnaissance to commercial resale – represents the first documented LLMjacking marketplace with complete attribution,” researchers Eilon Cohen and Ariel Fogel said. The operation has been traced to a threat actor named Hecker (aka Sakuya and LiveGamer101).

The decentralized nature of the exposed Ollama ecosystem, one that’s spread across cloud and residential environments, creates governance gaps, not to mention creates new avenues for prompt injections and proxying malicious traffic through victim infrastructure.

“The residential nature of much of the infrastructure complicates traditional governance and requires new approaches that distinguish between managed cloud deployments and distributed edge infrastructure,” the companies said. “For defenders, the key takeaway is that LLMs are increasingly deployed to the edge to translate instructions into actions. As such, they must be treated with the same authentication, monitoring, and network controls as other externally accessible infrastructure.”



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Russia-Ukraine war live: Second day of US-led war talks start in UAE | Russia-Ukraine war News

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‘Minister’s son or any minister is involved…’, Rabri Devi said a big thing on NEET student case

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The mystery of the death of a NEET student, who died a few days ago in Medanta Hospital of the capital Patna, has not been solved. This is why the government has appealed to the Center for a CBI investigation. The opposition is continuously making various allegations. At the same time, the ruling party says that this investigation is being given to CBI so that milk becomes milk and water turns into water. Meanwhile, now on Thursday (February 05, 2026) Rabri Devi has given a surprising statement.

Leader of Opposition in Bihar Legislative Council Rabri Devi has said on this whole issue that the minister’s son or any minister can be involved in this case. He clearly said that the case was covered up and then given to CBI.

On the other hand, Finance Minister Bijendra Prasad Yadav has presented the budget of Bihar in the House. On this Rabri Devi said that Budget I don’t have anything either. He said that work has been done to cheat the people of Bihar.

It has become a complete jungle raj: Brother Virendra

On the other hand, RJD MLA Bhai Virendra has also raised questions regarding the law and order of Bihar. While talking to the media in the assembly premises on Thursday, brother Virendra said that incidents are happening every day in Bihar, there is complete jungle raj here. Be it girls or anyone else, people are not safe. On the NEET student murder case, he said that the government is trying to whitewash this matter. Whoever is speaking is being pressurized.

Before going to the House, brother Virendra said that if the government does not give the desired response on the budget, then we will boycott. Will also protest. Regarding the Governor’s address, he said, the Governor has said only what the government has given in writing. There is nothing new, nor was any new scheme mentioned in the Governor’s address.”

Also read- ‘This Sangh Parivar will ban SC-ST Act also…’ BJP fires on Owaisi’s statement, sharply retaliates